Title of article :
Effect of fetal neural transplants in patients with Huntingtonʹs disease 6 years after surgery: a long-term follow-up study
Author/Authors :
Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi، نويسنده , , Véronique Gaura، نويسنده , , Pierre Brugières، نويسنده , , Jean-Pascal Lefaucheur، نويسنده , , Marie-Françoise Boissé، نويسنده , , Patrick Maison، نويسنده , , Sophie Baudic، نويسنده , , Maria-Joao Ribeiro، نويسنده , , Catherine Bourdet، نويسنده , , Philippe Remy، نويسنده , , Pierre Cesaro، نويسنده , , Philippe Hantraye، نويسنده , , Marc Peschanski، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
7
From page :
303
To page :
309
Abstract :
Summary Background Although we have shown in three out of five patients with Huntingtonʹs disease that motor and cognitive improvements 2 years after intracerebral fetal neural grafts are correlated with recovery of brain metabolic activity in grafted striatal areas and connected regions of the cerebral cortex, neural grafts are not known to have protective effects on the host brain per se. We undertook long-term follow-up of previously reported patients with the disease to ascertain the nature and extent of any secondary decline after grafting. Methods Five patients with Huntingtonʹs disease from our pilot study were assessed annually with the unified Huntingtonʹs disease rating scale, neuropsychological tests, and MRI, for up to 6 years after neural grafting. Resting cerebral activity was recorded at 2 and 6 years. Findings Clinical improvement plateaued after 2 years and then faded off variably 4–6 years after surgery. Dystonia deteriorated consistently, whereas chorea did not. Cognitive performance remained stable on non-timed tests, whereas progression of motor disability was shown by deterioration on timed tests. Hypometabolism also affected the brain heterogeneously, sparing the benefits in the frontal cortex and at the precise location of the grafts, but showing a progressive deterioration in other areas. Two patients who had no benefit from grafting at 2 years continued to decline in the same way as non-grafted patients. Interpretation Neuronal transplantation in Huntingtonʹs disease provides a period of several years of improvement and stability, but not a permanent cure for the disease. Improvement of the surgical procedure and in patient selection could improve the therapeutic value, but neuroprotective treatment seems to be unavoidable in the disease.
Journal title :
Lancet Neurology
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Lancet Neurology
Record number :
801650
Link To Document :
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